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rden hose special: Saving of one-fourth— Ss ro couplings; regular price $11.80; epecial for the week, $12.35 5 tegular price $16.50. —%-inch Red Empress garden heavy moulded; 50-ft on eg targa P44 3 regu! g wpeaiat for the week, $12.35, $9.35 reguine price $12.50. —%-inch Porpoise S-ply garden hose, 50-ft. lengths; complete with couplings; regular price $12.50; apecial for the weeks $9.35. eter chests, specially priced — veguiar $47.50 and 348 valores —@ cedar chest is your guar antee against = moths—this week we place on sale two @heste that are large ata Convenient, copper bound, @f genuine Tennessee » With attractive grain, te one pictured; reg- $47.50 and $48— values; for the week, $96.25. « a timely sale of traveling bags— es 96.65 regular price S10— —38 genuine cowhide black leather trayeling bags as pictured; heavy brass claspe and locks; regular Price $10—special for the week, &- ~~ / Your preats cn T Co. Good J Start Work Iné, July 28. | < E. 8. GOODWIN, President Vv. J. GREEN, Sales Manager 312 .. Seattle iain ait SAYS BABIES ‘ARE IN DANGER "TACOMA: 6. SCNOENPELD & SUNS. y *18066- J a “(fh Sard, Council Refuses Extra Milk Will Investigate Walkout In iMinots WASHINGTON, July 28.—fecre- of Labor Wilson has been re- called to Washington to take charge of the labor department's work in the [Minols coal strike, it was learned today. | Secretary Wilson ia expected to shortly make a report on the gitua tion to the president, Whether the president will take any action in the | matter depends on the nature of the Teport, It wie wtated at the White Mouse, eee Coal Operators to . Discuss Strike ST. LOUIS, July 28.—Conferences Of coal Mine operators in the central competitive field were called for to day by Thomas W. Brewster, chair man of the executive committee, to determine whether to sanction « | Joint seaston of miners and operators | '9 an attempt to settie unauthorised coal strikes, Brewster mild he expected replies | from the four state conferences early | today, He gaid he then would de: | whether to agree to @ joint morting asked by John lL. Lewis, miners’ president. eee |\Churchmen Predict New Steel Strike N YORK, July 24.—-Another jatrike in the steel industry is inev itable unless vital changes are made im administration of that industry, |according to the report of the Inter: |Chureh World Movement, on the re joent steel strike, mado publlc® here today, A copy of the report was sent to President Wilson, with a letter rec ommending a special commission be charged with effecting immediately a free and open conference between em. ployers and employes in the steel tn- TONIGHT §@0—Labor ing of Cent eWeekly meet- Labor Council + Center hall, 18th Smo! Neoa—Meve's cafeteria — man Albert Joh of the house migration, pI M. “tm it Legislation” vited. Day—Woodlané parkh—-G A R reunion §®O—Masoniec club, Areade —c Teerman William of redo, addi Re ican club, $18—Bikur Cholum duflding N. Vaile, \resses Veterans som uae pso- | building continues to be a fire haz- Mass mecting to @ posed Hebrew echool FRIDAY Grant the depart-| o.¢5—Colman Dock—-Membere of health an extra sam- John's West Seat budget committee of 8. 8. Kiteap II. ttle at 7 ) for four moonlight exeursion. BIRTHS Porrin, George, 615% F Pika boy. Kingston: Edward ford Seeh NW. Y. “| Sakal, T., 6115 36th ave. 8. boy, Iwasaki, K.. 333 Bao’ Edwards, Alex, Martin ho Olson, Henry, St Luke's hospital, boy "| Hogiand, Carl, Jr, bu bere. David E, 126%. 65th, bo Bi » Dav chon Vi. 4736 Sint & We Erickson, Anton Richard T. St. Luke's hos- irk, rank, Seattle General hoepital. girl Olson, Carl, 4003 22nd 8. W., Wintering, Henry B., Seattle hospital, girl Thorman, Seattle General the number of welfare nurses from two to three, but denied the request for two sanitary inspectors and added another clinic nurse to the Dersonnel of the department. Owing to the inability of the city hospital to obtain student nurses, the councilmen granted an increase of five trained nurses to the staff, at &@ cost of $5,040. Provisions were made in the health department budget for an increased staff at Firlands, the city sanitarium | > and quarantine station. County Garage Is Still Fire Hazard The garage in the CountyCity| ; trl eneral pital, girl George, 2102 EB. Madison, un, 4802 Othello, W. Blaine, by . 4857 48th SW. F., 6058 Second girl. 1 Brooklyn ave., . Levi P., Seattle General hos- pital, girl Clarence A., Seattle General 1 1 ard. The board of county .commis-| R rles, Seattle General sioners took under advisement Tues- day the suggestion offered by Super intendent of Buildings W, W. Me Guire that an aeroalarm system be installed. The question will be brought up again on August 3. « Hiam Ls, Seattle General «ir erner F., Providence hos- red C., 2128 EK. James st., MARRIAGE LICENSES Name and Residence. Age. Wright, Edward J., Seattle . Wathon, Peart L., Bremerton . Yates, Marquise, Seattl Hammond, Gladys, Seatt Chapman, Will Abbott, Jean, Hasson, Bill Inael, Mrs. fe jaunderson, Dorothy, er, Ulmont, Seattle . largaret A., Seattle , Anderson, Alfred, Seattle .. William, There Prabecki, John, Seattle Bocking, Mabel, Seattle Edwards, Carl Swensen, Ida, Vai 26 - Legal «Legal a 36 er) scaly trouble, dandruff, falling hair, this tried and proved, guaranteed remedy has never yet failed. Buy it from your druggist. Have it applied by your barber or hair dresser. + Legal | | j i Bi | Ney Vr Se iae HENIAETIE NEPON Miss Henrietta hog | in a department store. If \fvenes wore asoorl IDENTIFY TRUNK (JUDGE HEARS . STARTS ON &@ kidUke doubling of one knee under Never thought much about politics. “I waa brought up in the country, near Chicago, and 1 rabed around with the boye—my two brothers— and did athletic things and was al- ways driving something—a donkey, @ pony, then horses, and now mo- tors (pot to mention the buby-car rr ». “My mother died some yearn ago and then I managed the home and took card of father and the boys. “Then I waa silly enough to get MURDER VICTIM Slain Woman Was Mrs. Katherine Leroy NEW YORK, Juty 24.—Th body of @ woman found in « trunk here ‘was positively Mentified by Mra. Leo Trumbull, of Detroit, today an Mrs. Katherine Leroy of that city. eee Seek Trunk Murderer aor on Pacific Coast BAN FRANCISCO, July 28,—-Coast police departments today took @ hand in the attempt to unravel the my» terious w York Detroit murder.” They were looking for Rugene Le “trunk | STABBING CAS Takes Decision Under Ad- visement After hearing all sides of a stab bing in the White buflding barber | shop, July 13, that started in a dis |ecussion over @ colored porter’s max Hage and ended with one man tn the hospital and another in jail, Judge John B. Gordon took the secondde- gree ansault charge agninst Richard Smith, colored porter, under advise- |ment Wednesday, smith stuck « knife between Barber Loy Slinkard’s ribs in the quarrel, Smith was shining the ehoes of | Myrtle Patterson, manicurist, of 3610 | Renton ave., when Slinkard inquired neuritia—only iiness I ever had in my Mfel Dad packed me off to Virginia Hot’ Springs—-and rel, there tan't much more to tel I made frantic protest; for here we were, getting down to what T wanted to know more than any thing elwe, and my pretty lady was breaking off. LOVE AT SIGHT? ASK MRS, ANSBERRY Was it—waa it love at sight?” “It certainly WAS!" The speaker was, Mrs. T. T. Ansberry, who, with Judge Ansberry, her husband, has known “Jimmy” Cox for years. Bhe had suddenly come into the room. “Wasn't it, Margaretta?” “Well, perhaps—if you want to put It that way. I suppose there's always a strong attraction between * girl and & map who ultimately marry-—even the first time they meet.” onnense!” wan Mra. Ansberry’s comment ‘ou ‘know perfectly well, Margaretta, that the moment Jimmy Cox saw you that day on the porch after the golf game, HE was absolutely bitnd and deaf to every other human being, while YOU-- why, didn’t you give away the bunch of orchids he sent you?” Thies was nit wy Intercsting. i?” L urged. “Tell me.” “You teM her,” said Mra. Cox to BRA 17, of Paterson, N. J., sells muslin) Mre. Ansberry, ‘if you want to. Be- the beauty judges who selected her|*4ee—1 onty loaned them.” las Paterson's prettiest salesgirl are right in their belief that ty tinen ee she's the prettiest salesgirl in America, she'll get a trial on’ the stage and in the pictures at $100 a week—$1,200 in all.| “4 xn TO MAKE REPENTANT that a chum of the then She is a national entrant in the great salesgirls’ beauty con-| Marearetia Biair had wuffered a se- test conducted in nearly 100 cities recently. is JAP PROBE return to the federal building bere -| Thursday and continue their hear -lings. A summary of the evidence submitted in Beattie so far, follows: bt Meanwhile they have had ample op- portunity to hide themesives suc search. As have f in i ii tious quarre! wth her dearest young man. Mine Blair was the confidante, STARTS ON PAGE ONE But how to make him Jealous, aye, that was the rub, “Wear my orchids,” ‘The burden t eventually borne,| rhe then Mies Blair, for orchids, as the committee was informed, byjany woman knows, always mean an American hotel guests, who are un-jadmirer. No girl buys orchids for aware, in most cases, that the hotel/ herself. No gir! sends another gir! trolled because Japlorchida. Orchids mean a MAN. g 3 i l i Eellill Pe | i i:if hr I "| Aumust 20. ERE ii iy ‘}should be abolished and replaced ly, but at such low wages, living so cheaply and tn some instances so un: sanitary, that Americans compete with them. Inglis, in one instance was this: After thé, war the Stetson-Post Lumber company advertised for 30 men, Thirty war veterans were Japs came. The Japs got the jobs The veterans were turned down» Working first at small wages, sav- ing a little money, borrowing more from some apparently unlimited source, the Jap enters into business. Others follow. By underselling, the Japs oust American competition, and the history of Japanese business in vasion shows that, once they gain control in ahy line of industry, prices fare raised enormously, PROSECUTION 18 UNSUCCESSFUL A Japanese potato king evaded the food hoarding law here because he proved he was @ producer, and the law permits a producer to hold his product. He had many thousands of bushels of potatoes in storage in this city, when prices were exorbitant, even prohibitive, yet the govern. ment was unable to touch him. There has never in this district been an instance of successful prose- cution where the cost of living was involved, Maj. E. 8. Gill, of the Se. attle Retail Grocers’ association, told the committee. Japanese have ruined the Amert- can codfishing business on this coast; they now have obtained a foot- ‘9 | hola in every part of the city with 4 | Broaery stores | and are pressing ; American grocers to the wall by cut- j ting prices, | “This seems a benefit to the gen- 5 ‘eral public,” commented Representa- , tive Albert Johnson, chairman of the probe committee. “But it actually is not,” Gill ex- Legal plained, “becnuse it casts Americans Nash, Albert M Harbor ..23out of business, wet MoBoriey, Margare eattle. 2.24 \oU eu Seapayeriehes: Bem DIVORCES GRANTED Winn, Ida from Wallace P. rfeldt, Madaline Duer from Wal- WwW and makes them and their families ;® burden on the community.” |DOMINATE HOTEL BUSINESS HERE Japanese have so dominated the hotel business in this city that the ifigures, when presented to the com- | mittee, drew an exclamation of sur- prise from Representative John 5. Raker, and Raker ts a Californian. Hotel leaseholds have been so high- Cotterman, James B., 58, 607 Marion ly inflated, due to Jap intrusion, that Colonel Inglis, himself @ hotel man, f Fe a ag en after returning from the world war, eRe eh. TUM & NIBDOR Roms | endic imacnsihie to engage is thal Koeph, Frederick, 67, 2336 15th ave. 8.| business longer. He found leases Biterstad, Knut L, 63, Minor hos-'had been let and sublet so many en, infant, 29 daya, 6240 45th times over that the price was pro- By te 5280 & wc Diblidve, nit imma from Nelson M. Julia B. from Willis Ww. Marcella from Ross B. ‘auline from Herbert. DEATHS Tebo, John, 92, 1126 N. 85th at. Fowler, Martha, 84, 6011 Ninth ave. | Piles, Davis, at. Nolp. Maggie, 76, 5300 Keyatbne pl. pF15q with a treaty in “black and white,” in the opinion of many witnesses. jong seen the light.” But ft fs an open secret that she did not see it for @ year and « half, and that her “But no one,” affirms Mre. “can know Jim without loving him. Fren his political enemies love him personally. “As for father—well, father was .;aiways the kind of republican to whom you wouldn't even mention a democrat! “It took me a long time to tell dad Jim's politics. You see, he was only An ex-governor when I met him. He had served but one term, and father .|4idn't know much about him. He Japanese witneasen, ‘What to do with the Japanese al- ready here is @ problem no witness + Providence hos- | sent. They waited at the mill. Thirty | ventured an opinion upon. America is to blame for the situa- tion according to Dr. M. A. Matthews and Japan not at ail. Unrestricted immigration of any aliens is bad policy, and there are nationalities not of the colored races that should be restricted as immigrants. Dr. Matthews added: “Any American who sells or leases to Japanese is yellow-backed.” Jap Prober Will Talk to Veterans Representative’ William N. Vaile, of Colorado, a member of the con- gressional Jap probe committee, will | deliver a stereopticon lecture on “The Red vs. the Red White-and-Blue,” | | under the auspices of the Veterans’ Republican club at 8:30 ‘ Thursday evening, probably in the Masonic} club rooms. The meeting will be} Public, and open to women. “Big Story” Is | Due to Break | at Three P. M. LOS ANGELES, July 28.—John Armstrong shak | John Jacob declared legally sane, is registered ®@ local hotel under the name of H, Chilto and prepared to make public a “big story," believed to be @ report of his first year's fight against the “lunacy trust.” Chaloner, author of the famous “Who's Looney Now?" message to his brother, Bob Chaloner, at the time of the latter's marriage to Lina Caval refused to be interviewed today, He has a “big story" for re- lease at 3 o'clock this afternoon was his only statement, Burglars Jimmy Window, Get Gem Jimmying a window, burglars en tered the home of B. W. Masters, 700 15th ave, N., Tuesday night, and stole @ diamond brooch valued ea —~ eee has been elected twice since, and here's the miracle—father ts going to vete for him next November!” YOUR TEETH X-RAYED FREE Dr. L. BR Clark each morning between the hours of 9 and 10:80. No cost or obligation whatever. We have a fine, brand new ea be bi we are your dis- posal without charge be- tween the hours * men- tioned above. Please come as earl: the morning as possible. REGAL DENTAL OFFICES Dr, L. R. Clark, Manager 1405 THIRD AVENUE Northwest Corner Third Avenue and Union Street Diagonally Across the Street from the Postoffice Lady Attendants on Duty at All Times in roy, said to be the, husband of Kath. |!f “nother porter had married, Smith erine Leroy, who, Bastern author, | 'esetted Slinkard’s expression of the tion believe, might have been the| question, He swore at Slinkard, he woman whose muullated body was! “Omitted on the stand, but later apob found in a trunk at the American mized. Slinkard admitted slapping express office in New York. jthe porter, Smith claimed Slinkard The search started on telegraphic | ¥44 beating him when he grabbed @ AAvicgs from the Kast, saying a ratl.| knife in self-defense and slashed. road porter had seen a man answer-|The cut required 14 stitches and ing Leroy's description on a train | "4rrowly minwed Slinkard’s heart bound for San Francisco or Los An weles, eee Report Leroy Now Hiding in Mexico DETROIT, Mich., July E. Fer- nandes, alias Kugene Leroy, alias Wood, ought In connection with the New York-Detroit trunk murder muntery, is now tn Baltilie, state of Coahuila, Mexico, acrording to word received here today by Chief of De- tectives Fox. JITNEY HEARING IS POSTPONED Temporary ~ Injanction Is Still in Force Hearing of the jitney bus in- terests’ suit against the city was cbntinued Wednesday until Sep- tember 20 by Superior Judge Ever- ett Smith. The case was to have been *yard today on its merits, but the con- tinuance was made because of a writ of prohibition obtained by the jitneymen‘s attorneys from the su- Preme court made returnable on In the meantime the temporary injunction held against the city by the drivers will remain in force until after the arguments on the supreme court writ are! Can’t Trace Bullet Breaking a window and {1 itaelf in the wall, a Bullet narrowly minsed wounding the family of 8. M. Wilson, 178 Nickerson st, Tuesday |night. Police were unable to trace the bullet. Boys Bombard Car With Stale Fruit Boys in the neighborhood of Broadway N. and Republican st were giving street cars the “bum's rush” last night, when policemen intervened. Several cars were spat tered by stale fruit thrown by the No system of doing busi- ness succeeds unless it satisfies a Public De . City officials, meeting hurriedly in Mayor Caldwell's office Tuesday afternoon, were unable to decide on a line of procedure to be fol- lowed in the jitney tangle. A suggestion that the city coun- cil proceed at once to pass an or-| dinance alwolutety prohibiting sit- neys in Seattle was considered but was not put to a vote. iage Failure, eos ge ; William A. Sitton and his wife, Georgia E., quarreied. William filed | suit for divorce Wednesday in the! superior court, in which he claimed are our best ments. Washington Ti “Under State Supervision” ASSETS MORE THAN they could never again live together as man and wife. They were mar- ried in Centralia, in 1912. THE B DENTAL | EST IN SERVICE Is what we give you here. Expert Dentists Best Materials Highest Grade Workmanship Guaranteed Work Reasonable Prices What more can you desire frome your dentist? And, remember, at this | 4 office you are dealing with an old es- tablished concern which has pleased * and satisfied the people of this ter- © ritory. FREE EXAMINATION We will be glad to examine your teeth thoroughly, without charge, and give you expert advice as to your dental needs. THE BOSTON DENTAL CO. 1422 Second Avenue Opposite the Bon Marche be